there are 6 molecules of chlorine gas
three different masses.
On the periodic table, the atomic weight listed for most of the elements is the average of that element's isotopes. Chlorine has 2 common isotopes: Chlorine-35 (75.77% of all chlorine) and chlorine-37 (24.23%). This has two extra neutrons. This works out to an average of 35.453.
Chlorine has a density of 3.2 g/L. So it really depends on how much you have. If you know the volume of your sample you can calculate the weight.
u cant!answ2. If your Chlorine sample is free to assume a different shape, or if it is free to fill a new enclosed volume, then it is a gas. This follows from the definition of a gas.
yes
3
three different masses.
this totally depends on the amount of total chlorine given by the source water and the contaminents and or cross connections.
The symbol N2 is for the diatomic molecule of nitrogen; it is not a mixture.
On the periodic table, the atomic weight listed for most of the elements is the average of that element's isotopes. Chlorine has 2 common isotopes: Chlorine-35 (75.77% of all chlorine) and chlorine-37 (24.23%). This has two extra neutrons. This works out to an average of 35.453.
Chlorine will not be seperated out of the sample effluent.
Chlorine is not a compound, it is an element. That means that if you have a pure sample of chlorine then it will not contain iodine, or anything other than chlorine. It would be somewhat unlikely to find iodine as an impurity in chlorine, because iodine is solid at room temperature while chlorine is a gas.
Check your water for cyanuric acid (chlorine stabalizer) and for ortho phosphates (algee food) Take a water sample to the store where you buy chemicals to get it analyzed.
Chlorine has a density of 3.2 g/L. So it really depends on how much you have. If you know the volume of your sample you can calculate the weight.
add acid and chlorine. or better still take a sample of water to your pool shop where they will test it ad tel you exactly what you need to set it right,
2 PtCl ------> 2 Pt + Cl2 The platinum (I) chloride decomposed to produce platinum metal and diatomic chlorine gas
u cant!answ2. If your Chlorine sample is free to assume a different shape, or if it is free to fill a new enclosed volume, then it is a gas. This follows from the definition of a gas.